Eukaryotic SNARE VAMP3 Dynamically Interacts with Multiple Chlamydial Inclusion Membrane Proteins [Cellular Microbiology: Pathogen-Host Cell Molecular Interactions]

Chlamydia trachomatis, an obligate intracellular pathogen, undergoes a biphasic developmental cycle within a membrane-bound vacuole called the chlamydial inclusion. To facilitate interactions with the host cell, Chlamydia modifies the inclusion membrane with type III secreted proteins, called Incs. As with all chlamydial proteins, Incs are temporally expressed, modifying the chlamydial inclusion during the early and mid-developmental cycle. VAMP3 and VAMP4 are eukaryotic SNARE proteins that mediate membrane fusion and are recruited to the inclusion to facilitate inclusion expansion. Their recruitment requires de novo chlamydial protein synthesis during the mid-developmental cycle. Thus, we hypothesize that VAMP3 and VAMP4 are recruited by Incs. In chlamydia-infected cells, identifying Inc binding partners for SNARE proteins specifically has been elusive. To date, most studies examining chlamydial Inc and eukaryotic proteins have benefitted from stable interacting partners or a robust interaction at a specific time postinfection. While these types of interactions are the predominant class that have been identified, they are likely the exception to chlamydia-host interactions. Therefore, we applied two separate but complementary experimental systems to identify candidate chlamydial Inc binding partners for VAMPs. Based on these results, we created transformed strains of C. trachomatis serovar L2 to inducibly express a candidate Inc-FLAG protein. In chlamydia-infected cells, we ...
Source: Infection and Immunity - Category: Infectious Diseases Authors: Tags: Cellular Microbiology: Pathogen-Host Cell Molecular Interactions Source Type: research